I think you really don't have anything to worry about. Battery life is affected by all kinds of environmental factors as well as how you use the laptop and how often you use it on battery vs. AC power.

95% is probably fine right now since battery tests can never be 100% accurate anyway.

Now if you were only getting like 50% life out of it after 3 weeks, I'd be concerned.

ahhh...5570 out of 5590 is 99% not 95%!
Also, lipo battery accuracy is known to be more accurate as it get older(around 20 cycles). I would wait a little, and cycle it as often as you can. If it doesn't get better, take it to apple and get it looked at if you are really paranoid.
find my thread, nvm, here it is, My MBP's battery health just got a bit worse
There is some good info in there.

If you are distressed by anything external, the pain is not due to the thing itself but to your own estimate of it; and this you have the power to revoke at any moment. Marcus Aurelius

ahhh...5570 out of 5590 is 99% not 95%!
Also, lipo battery accuracy is known to be more accurate as it get older(around 20 cycles). I would wait a little, and cycle it as often as you can. If it doesn't get better, take it to apple and get it looked at if you are really paranoid.
find my thread, nvm, here it is, My MBP's battery health just got a bit worse
There is some good info in there.

heyy sorry

i meant to write 5570 out of 5790... it was a typo and i didnt know how to correct my post. iv had 22 cycles now.

i have been i must have fully drained and fully charged at least 10-15 times now.

thanks for the reply il check out the link, and wait around a bit then take it to the apple store sometime when its convenient .

i have been i must have fully drained and fully charged at least 10-15 times now.

The misconception is that calibrating a battery makes it healthier. All it does is make the battery meter more accurate. If you don't care about the accuracy of your battery meter then you technically don't need to calibrate.

You should not be calibrating more than once a month. From what I have read Lithium batteries like being drained partially rather than frequent full drains. I have a PowerBook that is about 7 years old and it's still has the original battery that works. I just don't leave it plugged in all the time. If you use your laptop as a portable then that happens naturally but there are a lot of people who use their laptops as a desktop though.

Quote:

Originally Posted by sam84

and since then i must have fully drained (and wait 5 hours) and charged (and leave for an extra 2 hours) like apple say to at least 5 times...

I don't believe you have to do that to calibrate the battery. All I do is fully drain the battery and then plug it in right away when it goes to sleep. I then keep it plugged until it is fully charged. My battery meter is pretty accurate when doing so. As mentioned don't do this more than once a month and possibly longer if you notice your battery meter is still accurate.

The battery needs to be recalibrated from time to time to keep the onscreen battery time and percent display accurate and to keep the battery operating at maximum efficiency. You should perform this procedure when you first use your computer and then every few months after that. If you normally leave your Apple portable computer connected to AC power and very rarely use it on battery power you may want to perform this process once a month.

Sorry, I don't buy that! You're not the only one who has experience with batteries.

Well I'm not saying my advice is the word of God or anything. I'm just telling you what I have experienced and have done to preserve my battery. It's worked for me so far. I'm not forcing anyone to take my advice. I'm just presenting it and people can choose to do whatever they want with the information.

Since you provided a link to your battery stats here's one from my PowerBook that I mentioned. It's a 7 year old original battery and still works well. We can at least agree that we both like car wallpapers.